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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Wolozin B, Manger J, Bryant R, Cordy J, Green RC, McKee A. Re-assessing the relationship between cholesterol, statins and Alzheimer's disease. Acta Neurol Scand Suppl. 2006;185:63-70. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related Papers
  Related Paper: Twenty-six-year change in total cholesterol levels and incident dementia: the Honolulu-Asia Aging Study.

Comment by:  Miia Kivipelto, Hilkka Soininen, ARF Advisor, Alina Solomon
Submitted 12 January 2007  |  Permalink Posted 12 January 2007

Cholesterol has received a lot of attention as a potential modifiable risk factor for dementia and AD. Interestingly, experimental studies have linked disturbances in cholesterol homeostasis with all major neuropathological features of AD. Some long-term epidemiological studies have indicated that high serum cholesterol at midlife may increase the risk of AD later in life (Notkola et al., 1998; Kivipelto et al., 2002; Whitmer et al., 2005). However, shorter term follow-up studies in older populations have reported controversial results.

In this study, Stewart and colleagues studied changes in total cholesterol (TC) from midlife to late life in the well-described cohort of the Honolulu-Asia Aging Study (HAAS). HAAS has several strengths, including a large population sample, extensive long-term follow-up (26 years), and multiple TC measurements. The study indicated that TC levels in men with AD had declined at least 15 years before the diagnoses. This trend of change remained significant even after adjustments for a large scale of potential confounders. The decline in TC was...  Read more


  Related Paper: Twenty-six-year change in total cholesterol levels and incident dementia: the Honolulu-Asia Aging Study.

Comment by:  Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 17 January 2007  |  Permalink Posted 17 January 2007

The relative importance of risk factors for cardiovascular disease in the risk of dementia has gained increasing attention over the past decade. Cholesterol, hypertension, and diabetes have all been suggested to be associated with an increased risk of dementia. The potential role of cholesterol in the pathophysiology of dementia and Alzheimer disease (AD) is particularly interesting. Late-life cholesterol does not appear to be a risk factor for AD, but Kivipelto and colleagues have shown that elevated mid-life cholesterol is a risk factor for dementia and AD [1]. Many groups, including Kivipelto’s, report that cholesterol levels appear to decline prior to the onset of dementia, which might account for why late-life elevated cholesterol is not a risk factor for dementia or AD [1-4]. Two major questions in the field are to understand how important these changes in cholesterol are to the pathophysiology of AD and the extent to which these changes in cholesterol generalize across populations.

The current study, by Stewart and colleagues, examines these questions using 26 years of...  Read more


  Related Paper: Twenty-six-year change in total cholesterol levels and incident dementia: the Honolulu-Asia Aging Study.

Comment by:  Martha Clare Morris
Submitted 7 February 2007  |  Permalink Posted 7 February 2007

The article by Stewart et al. relating 26-year change in cholesterol to incident dementia adds considerably to a complex and seemingly inconsistent body of literature. A key indication that cholesterol plays a central role in Alzheimer disease is the increase in disease risk among persons with the apolipoprotein E4 allele, the primary genetic risk factor in late-onset AD. Apolipoprotein E is the major cholesterol transporter in the brain. There is emerging evidence of the role of cholesterol metabolism in AD (1), but it is not clear whether dyshomeostasis in cholesterol may be a cause or effect of the disease process, or both.

The Stewart et al. study does not find differences in blood cholesterol levels at midlife or late life by AD status, but finds greater rate of decline in cholesterol levels with age among those who eventually develop AD. Similar complex associations have been demonstrated between dementia and other physiologic parameters, such as blood pressure (2) and weight (3). Decline in these risk factors as many as 15 years before clinical manifestation of the...  Read more


  Related Paper: Twenty-six-year change in total cholesterol levels and incident dementia: the Honolulu-Asia Aging Study.

Comment by:  Mike Pappolla
Submitted 12 February 2007  |  Permalink Posted 13 February 2007

The study by Stewart et al. fails to show differences in cholesterol levels at midlife or late life and AD diagnosis. This is (apparently) in contrast with several epidemiological studies (1-3). Ben Wolozin in his comment above astutely noticed that a substantial difference in the Stewart et al. study is age and stated “…Although the Honolulu study extends back for 26 years, the average age of the people in the current study is 80 years old, meaning that their average age at the start of the study was already 54.”

This is of major importance in explaining some of these apparent disparities. In a prior neuropathological study we conducted (4), cholesterolemia correlated with presence of amyloid deposition only in the youngest subjects (40 to 55 years) with amyloid deposition (p = 0.000 for all ApoE isoforms; p = 0.009 for ApoE3/3 subjects). In this group, increases in cholesterolemia from 181 to 200 almost tripled the odds for developing amyloid, independent of ApoE isoform. In our study, the difference in mean total cholesterol between subjects with and without amyloid...  Read more

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